Litcius/Paper detail

‘I Try Not to Be Dominant, but I’m a Lawyer!’: Advisor Resources, Context, and Refugee Credibility

Laura Smith‐Khan

2020Journal of Refugee Studies52 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Credibility assessments are a key component of refugee status determination. However, the difficulties associated with these assessments make professional assistance important. This article examines qualitative interviews with eight Australian migration advisors, exploring the key resources they report drawing on when contributing to client credibility in refugee status determination processes. Participants make sense of these resources and their choices about how they mobilize them by explicitly situating them within institutional and policy contexts. The article concludes that individual advisors vary in their approaches based on their beliefs about the particular resources they can and should mobilize within this context. These beliefs and practices, and the resources and contexts underlying them, have implications for how advisors contribute to asylum-seeker credibility, and ultimately, for access to refugee protection.

Topics & Concepts

CredibilityRefugeeContext (archaeology)Political sciencePublic relationsKey (lock)Qualitative researchSocial psychologySociologyPsychologyLawSocial scienceGeographyComputer scienceComputer securityArchaeologyInterpreting and Communication in HealthcareMigration, Health and TraumaMigration, Refugees, and Integration